With the lifting of moratorium on death
penalty last December, one of the death row prisoners is Shafqat Husaain, who
was sentenced in 2004 at the age of 14.

A watchman by profession, Shafqat Hussain was
sentenced by an Anti-Terrorism Court to death for kidnapping and killing a
seven-year-old boy. But there is a question mark over how the confession was
extracted. There are claims that Shafqat confessed to the crime following
several days of torture in police detention.

Pakistan’s bad name in unfair trials apart,
the country is a signatory to the International Convention on the Rights of the
Child. The sentence goes against the Juvenile Justice System Ordinance that clearly
states that a suspect under 18 cannot be awarded the death sentence.

There are currently over 8,000 people on
death row in Pakistan. Legal aid group Justice Project Pakistan, which works to
champion the rights of such prisoners, says that it is the largest number of
prisoners facing the death penalty in the world. Justice Project Pakistan fears
that there will be a significant number of cases where convictions were
obtained under duress or a sentence was given to a minor. In research which was
conducted in conjunction with the Yale Law School, nearly 2,000 cases of
torture in Faisalabad were documented. Interviewees accused police of
manufacturing evidence and torturing suspects.

Given this, it seems only those who cannot
pay their way through the system end up at death row. The other day there was a
news that the mother of Shafqat Hussain may not come to see her son before he
is sent to the gallows because the family cannot afford to send her to Karachi.
So, you will die if you are poor.

About Me

A media and communication specialist by profession, I love
to write in my free time. Writing feels similar to eating,
breathing or sleeping. I have a thing for social
issues, particularly human rights.

Warning: dark humour may be one of my specialities.

The opinions expressed in this blog are personal, and do not represent any organisation.